Tech Week: Robots, Turkish Twitter And A Frustrated Zuckerberg

Happy weekend! If you've missed our tech coverage and the larger conversation at the intersection of technology and culture this week, here's your look back. ICYMI is what we reported on NPR, The Big Conversation includes news from all sorts of places, and Curiosities are important or fun links we think you should check out.

What was on your radar? What should we look out for next week? Tell us in the comment section below. We do read them, you know.

And your weekly gaming fix: National reporter Claudio Sanchez examines the food choices at a college hackathon; game-developer wizards united at a magical conference in San Francisco; and Laura Sydell tries out Oculus Rift, virtual reality goggles that bring the action right in front of your eyes. And in the physical world of physical gaming, pro sports teams can connect with their fans (and critics) in real-time now, and that means a good public relations team is more important than ever.

Snooping backlash: Facebook made public its CEO Mark Zuckerberg's frustration with the reach of government surveillance. Midweek, the NSA's top lawyer said that tech companies actually knew about the government's tactics all along, suggesting the companies are only reacting with outrage now that the news is public. Friday, the White House hosted Zuckerberg — and a number of other tech company leaders — to hash things out, the second of such meetings on the surveillance topic.

The man Newsweek named as the creator of the crytpocurrency says he's not it, and he may sue. And that being named has killed his chances at finding gainful employment, after already being in difficult financial straits.

The social giant put out this website so you can look back on your first tweet. They're mostly embarrassing, since you were likely tweeting at no one. Case in point:

And a final note from your blog host, Elise...

This weekly post is sometimes written by Emily Siner, whom regular All Tech readers have probably gotten to know over the past six months. She's headed soon to our NPR member station in Nashville, so I wanted to close out this post by saying thank you and goodbye to Ms. Siner, who we will miss tremendously. Nashville Public Radio, you're getting a real talent.